37 N.Y.S. 471 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The question presented in this case seems to be one of first impression in this jurisdiction, and comes before the court on appeal from a judgment overruling a demurrer to the complaint. Stated with precision, the inquiry is, whether the defendant is liable cimliter and to this particular plaintiff for the unlawful dissection of the remains of her husband, an act not only unlawful, but constituting, on the assumption that the facts alleged are true, a criminal offense. The complaint sets forth that on the 16th of May, 1891, the plaintiff’s husband fell through an elevator shaft in a building in the city of Hew York, and was taken in an unconscious condition to the Bellevue Hospital, where he died three hours after his admission; that the plaintiff was a loving and devoted wife, and was under the duty and obligation and had the right of burying her husband; that she applied at the hospital for his body, and begged and implored those who were in charge of it not to allow or permit an autopsy to be performed, and gave notice that she would immediately send an undertaker for the body to remove it to her home, where it would be prepared for burial; that notwithstanding her request and protestations the defendant, without her knowledge or consent, procured, assisted, aided and abetted in performing an autopsy on her husband’s body, which autopsy was performed without any authority of law, and was willfully done by cutting open and otherwise abusing and maltreating the dead body. The complaint then proceeds to state matter intended to be in aggravation of damages, and ends with a demand for a money judgment.
The learned judge who decided this demurrer at the Special Term has given no statement of the views which prompted his decision, and we are, therefore, without the advantage of a preliminary judicial examination of the question involved, but we have reached the conclusion that the court below was right in overruling the demurrer on the case as it is stated in the pleading.
The act of 1854 (Chap. 198), well known as the act to promote medical science, expressly prohibits the dissection of a dead body- or its delivery to any one for the purposes of dissection if the relatives or friends of the deceased object, or if they make application within a certain time (as appears to have been done in this case) for the remains for the purposes of burial.
At the outset of the inquiry the objection is taken to the maintenance of the action; that assuming, for the purposes of the argument, a civil action will lie, the plaintiff has no standing in court to maintain it. This objection proceeds upon the idea that if any one may bring an action of this character it must be the next of kin. It has been stated in general terms in several cases that in the absence of testamentary direction on the part of the deceased the exclusive right of burial, and of designating the place in which human remains shall be interred, is with the next of tin. Those cases are referred to and cited in an opinion of Mr. Justice Landon in the case of Snyder v. Snyder (60 How. Pr. 370), and in commenting upon them that learned judge says: “ Most of the cases there referred to arose with respect to the right to protect the place where the remains were buried; to prevent a disinterment or to collect from the executors, husband or relative of the deceased the expenses of the funeral. In the absence, of a contention prior to burial, as to the right between relatives to designate the place of burial, the broad doctrine that the right rests exclusively with the next of tin can hardly be considered as a judicial exclusion of the right of the widow.”
In this case it will be observed that the question is directly presented with reference to the duty and right the widow owes and
This brings us to the consideration of the other question involved, namely, that concerning the right to maintain an action at all. The ground of objection urged by the appellant is that there can be no such action because there.can be no such thing as property in human remains. By the common law and strioti juris the proposition as to property may be maintainable. A long line of judicial decisions appears to have established a general doctrine to that effect, but courts of equity have frequently interfered to protect the remains of the dead ; and courts of'law have also afforded remedies through formal legal actions wherever any element of trespass to property, real or personal, was associated with the molestation of the remains of the
But we are not disposed to ¡3ut the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action on the ground of a property right in the remains of her husband, nor do we think that the discussion is properly placed when it is rested exclusively upon that proposition. Irrespective of any claim of property, the right which inhered in the plaintiff as the decedent’s widow, and in one sense his nearest relative, was a right to the possession of the body for the purpose of burying it; that is, to perform a duty which the law required some one to perform, and which it was her right by reason of her relationship to the decedent to perform. That right of possession is a clear legal right, and, to use the language of Mr. Buggles in his valuable report adopted by the court in the Brick Church Case (4 Bradf. Surr. Rep. 532), “ the right to bury a corpse and to preserve its remains is a legal right which the courts of law will recognize and protect.” The right is to the possession of the corpse in the same condition it was in when death supervened. It is the right to what remains when the breath leaves the body, and not merely to such a hacked, hewed and mutilated corpse as some stranger, an offender against the criminal law, may7 choose to turn over to an afflicted relative. If this right
The judgment overruling the demurrer must be affirmed, with costs.
Van Bbunt, P. J., Barrett, Bumsey and Williams, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.